Enter Patient
William Ernest Henley
The morning mists still haunt the stony street; The northern summer air is shrill and cold; And lo, the Hospital, grey, quiet, old, Where Life and Death like friendly chafferers meet. Thro’ the loud spaciousness and draughty gloom A small, strange child—so aged yet so young!— Her little arm besplinted and beslung, Precedes me gravely to the waiting-room. I limp behind, my confidence all gone. The grey-haired soldier-porter waves me on, And on I crawl, and still my spirits fail: A tragic meanness seems so to environ These corridors and stairs of stone and iron, Cold, naked, clean—half-workhouse and half-jail.
Next 10 Poems
- William Ernest Henley : Envoy-to Charles Baxter
- William Ernest Henley : Etching
- William Ernest Henley : Fill A Glass With Golden Wine
- William Ernest Henley : Friends . . . Old Friends . . .
- William Ernest Henley : From A Window In Princes Street
- William Ernest Henley : Grave
- William Ernest Henley : Gulls In An Aery Morrice
- William Ernest Henley : House-surgeon
- William Ernest Henley : I Am The Reaper
- William Ernest Henley : I Gave My Heart To A Woman
Previous 10 Poems
- William Ernest Henley : England, My England
- William Ernest Henley : Double Ballade Of The Nothingness Of Things
- William Ernest Henley : Double Ballade Of Life And Fate
- William Ernest Henley : Discharged
- William Ernest Henley : Dedication-to My Wife
- William Ernest Henley : Crosses And Troubles A-many Have Proved Me
- William Ernest Henley : Croquis
- William Ernest Henley : Croluis
- William Ernest Henley : Clinical
- William Ernest Henley : Children: Private Ward